Coming to Campus

- April 10, 2006

Coming to Campus is a section announcing visiting speakers of note.

Those who wish to submit items for this section should send a brief description (maximum 300 words) of the event, including the date, time, and place, and giving the name, title, outstanding accomplishments and, if available, a color photo of the speaker to: Visiting Speaker, Advance, 1266 Storrs Road, Storrs, CT 06269-4144 or by e-mail: advance@uconn.edu, with Visiting Speaker in the subject line.

The information must be received by 4 p.m. on Monday, a minimum of two weeks prior to the event.

Publication will depend on space available, and preference will be given to events of interest to a cross-section of the University community.

The imperial organization of the Ancient Near East will be the theme of the 2006 Beverly and Raymond Sackler Art and Archaeology Symposium, “Empires of the Ancient Near East: Genesis, Structure, Demise,” on Friday, April 14, at the Thomas. J. Dodd Research Center.

Speakers will address issues such as the various modes of imperial integration; the expansion of rule and its legitimation; rulers and the subjects of imperial address; and the social and cultural contexts of imperialization.

The symposium will also explore the structure of imperial economies, and the causes of their decline and fall.

John Curtis, The British Museum, “The Art of Achaemenid Persia: Origins and Influences,” 4 p.m.

Susan Downey, University of California, Los Angeles, “Rome and Parthia, Rival Empires in the Near East,” 4:45 p.m.

The symposium is open to the University community and the public. Admission is free.

The Beverly and Raymond Sackler Art and Archaeology Symposium, now in its fifth year, fosters an exchange of ideas between scholars, faculty, and students across the University and throughout New England.

The event is made possible by support from philanthropists Raymond and Beverly Sackler.